カーティスタウンに位置するこのアパートメントは、キラウエア火山洞窟から 3.8 km、Hiʻiaka's Healing Hawaiian Herb GardenおよびFuku-Bonsai Cultural Centerから 10 km 圏内です。Hilo Coffee Millおよびマウナ ロア マカダミア ナッツ工場も 20 km 圏内です。
Great spot. Very private and super clean. Hosts are super friendly. I would definitely stay there again.
Mahalo
Kevin C.
8/10 (良い)
Larry B.
2019 年 9 月 9 日
良かった点 : 清潔度、チェックイン、コミュニケーション、掲載情報の正確さ
Very nice manager
Fine
Larry B.
2019 年 8 月に 2 泊滞在
10/10 (非常に良い)
Debbie C.
2019 年 6 月 26 日
良かった点 : 清潔度、チェックイン、コミュニケーション、ロケーション、掲載情報の正確さ
Country Living
We had the best time visiting Hilo and getting to know the area. Secluded, off the beaten path, yet only 30 minutes from Hilo farmers market! Our pomeranian got along so well with their boxer and I enjoyed morning walks in the back field. At night the coqui frogs are chirping. It has a wonderful feeling of being in a bird sanctuary when you fall asleep. I miss the sound. Roby and Kayo are very gracious and are the example of the people that make the big island life so inviting. No traffic, peace & serenity all around. Highly recommended!
Debbie C.
2019 年 6 月に 9 泊滞在
この口コミは 2017 年以前に投稿されており、内容は検証されていません。
10/10 (非常に良い)
2015 年 10 月 14 日
Great Get-away Cabin, Wonderful Hosts
We stayed for over 2 weeks when we first got to the Big Island in January. (We were waiting on our house purchase to close.) Cabin is very nicely appointed, wifi is good. Pets (Hoot N Annie) were welcome. You will enjoy Stormy (the horse) Moses (the donkey) and Cisco (the dog). Part of the charm! The hosts are super nice. It is a little of the beaten path, but is not hard to get to. Go! Stay! Enjoy!
オーナーについて
オーナー : Roby Laird
We move from Japan to the Big Island in 1991. We spent 6 years in Japan teach English. We enjoyed traveling around Japan and interacting with the culture there. Kayo was born there and we stayed at her family home on Okayama. While we were there we developed a host of friends from all over the world. We still have contact with some of the. Our friends from down under will be visiting us for a few days in July. Its always great fun to get together. We are both retired now. Roby completed a career in social work assisting people with mental health issues to get services they needed. Kayo work in a Japanese restaurant with her long time friend and recently retired.
Roby was born in Indiana and left that state never to return after graduating from high on 1966. The draft was taking people right out of high school at the time so Roby joined the Marines and served 4 years. After discharge from the service, He worked as a carpenter until he met Kayo. Never having been in another country, Roby decided he wanted to try living in Japan. We wen to Japan in 1980.
Kayo was born in Japan were she went to high school. After high school she went to San Jose Cal. to attend college. She spent 3 years there studying English. She returned to Japan to work for her brother in his coffee shop. She had opportunity to travel with a friend to visit her friend in San Francisco where she met Roby. We have been married for 35 years now.
この宿泊施設の特徴
The Puna district has an interesting history. Hilo and Kau'are linked both geographically and historically through Puna. Prior to the arrival of western civilization there were routes that connected these two very different areas of the island through Puna. The areas they traversed included some stands of fairly intact native vegetation with little modern development, offering a glimpse into the past. The Puna Trail evolved from a trail system generally known as the ala loa or ala hele which served not only to provide travelers with access to resources with a given ahupua'a, but also passed through the entire district of Puna This trail still exists today. One can access it at the end of Kaloli drive in Hawaiian Paradise Park.
After Hawaii's first forestry law in 1839 restricted the removal of sandalwood trees, cattle ranching and coffee cultivation became the leading commercial activities. Before 1900, coffee was the chief agricultural crop in the area in 1899, the Ola'a Sugar Company was founded and the coffee trees were uprooted to make way for sugarcane. Fifteen years later the farmers would return to planting coffee.
Macadama nuts and papaya were introduced in 1881 and 1919 respectively. Papaya and macadama nuts have become the leading cash crops of Puna. About 97% of the states papaya production occurs in Puna.